Crop systems for Arkansas
Bookreader Item Preview
Share or Embed This Item
- Publication date
- 1918
- Topics
- Agriculture Arkansas, cropping systems, crop yield, crop rotation, crop management, plant cultural practices, cover crops, green manures, intercropping, legumes, soil management, soil conservation, erosion control, tillage, Agriculture -- Arkansas, Agriculture, Arkansas
- Publisher
- Washington, D.C. : United States Department of Agriculture
- Collection
- usda-farmersbulletin; usdanationalagriculturallibrary; fedlink
- Contributor
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library
- Language
- English
- Rights
- The contributing institution believes that this item is not in copyright.
- Volume
- no.1000
- Item Size
- 17.4M
24 pages : 23 cm
"Crop systems for Arkansas that make for increased food production and increased efficiency in man labor and horse labor are described in the following pages. By introduction of cowpeas, soy beans, and other legumes, and by second cropping, provision is made for a considerable increase in the number of crop acres that can be farmed by the average family. Thus, two men with a team, who under a cotton and corn system can farm but 33 acres of land, can handle 50 acres and raise 62 acres crops under a system providing for a 4-year rotation, including (10 cotton with a winter cover crop, (2) cowpeas, (30 oats or wheat followed by cowpeas, and (4) corn. In each of the copping systems suggested the crop acreages are calculated for tow men and a team, and for light medium and heavy soils. These systems in general apply to all of Arkansas except the northwestern part, and some of them may be used to advantage in northern Louisiana, northeastern Texas, southeastern Oklahoma, western Tennessee, and the northern half of Mississippi."--Page [2]
Cover title
Issued August 1918
"Contribution from the Office of Farm Management."
Need of better systems -- How the systems may be adapted to individual needs -- Ten systems outlined -- Summary of systems with acreage for light, medium and heavy soils -- Things to consider in choosing and adapting a crop system -- Relation of systems to food production -- Relation of systems to laibro requirements
"Crop systems for Arkansas that make for increased food production and increased efficiency in man labor and horse labor are described in the following pages. By introduction of cowpeas, soy beans, and other legumes, and by second cropping, provision is made for a considerable increase in the number of crop acres that can be farmed by the average family. Thus, two men with a team, who under a cotton and corn system can farm but 33 acres of land, can handle 50 acres and raise 62 acres crops under a system providing for a 4-year rotation, including (10 cotton with a winter cover crop, (2) cowpeas, (30 oats or wheat followed by cowpeas, and (4) corn. In each of the copping systems suggested the crop acreages are calculated for tow men and a team, and for light medium and heavy soils. These systems in general apply to all of Arkansas except the northwestern part, and some of them may be used to advantage in northern Louisiana, northeastern Texas, southeastern Oklahoma, western Tennessee, and the northern half of Mississippi."--Page [2]
Cover title
Issued August 1918
"Contribution from the Office of Farm Management."
Need of better systems -- How the systems may be adapted to individual needs -- Ten systems outlined -- Summary of systems with acreage for light, medium and heavy soils -- Things to consider in choosing and adapting a crop system -- Relation of systems to food production -- Relation of systems to laibro requirements
- Addeddate
- 2014-08-20 20:02:53
- Associated-names
- United States. Department of Agriculture, issuing body
- Identifier
- CAT87205204
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t55f1kz81
- Nal_call_number
- 1 Ag84F
- Ocr
- ABBYY FineReader 9.0
- Ocr_converted
- abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.4
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.12
- Page_number_confidence
- 95.83
- Pages
- 25
- Ppi
- 300
- Unique_id
- CAT87205204
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
comment
Reviews
298 Views
1 Favorite
DOWNLOAD OPTIONS
IN COLLECTIONS
Farmers' bulletin (United States. Dept. of Agriculture)Uploaded by PMurphy on
Open Library